Posts Tagged With: Sinai desert

On our luxury safaris, we aim to give our guests the type of comforts and standards that you would find in a 5 star hotel room. Private Bedouin tents are set up with a double bed, hand made decors and carpets, an endless supply of seasonal fruits, comfortable foldable chairs, hot showers, freshly pressed fruit juices, exquisite cuisine prepared with freshly ground spices and particular attention paid to all details in general. All this without losing the desert feel, without any impact on the environment, and leaving our locations spotless and without a trace.

For a special occasion such as a honeymoon, wedding anniversary, family gathering or any reason to be spoilt, why not try one of our luxury safaris and enjoy the beauty of the desert in full comfort.

A personal guide is allocated to each couple/person. His duties include being at your service whenever you require so. To prepare extra coals that are buried deep under your bed to provide underground heating (if required), to make sure coffee, tea, infusions, water and fresh juices are available to you throughout the day.

Tents are equipped with beds and top quality mattresses with clean sheets, blankets, pillows and cases, candles, fruit basket, tissues, towels, folding chairs, Bedouin seating area with a small ‘mangad’ (like a rounded metal tray) filled with warm coals and tea and coffee pots, handmade carpets and decorations.

Exquisite cuisine is part of the menu. Freshly prepared meals cooked with love and inspiration with only the top quality ingredients.

Contrary to expectations, the desert is covered with plants, trees and bushes that have sprouted from the rare rainfall. The flora has adapted to the dry conditions to survive, sometimes going for several years without water. For this reason the plants tend to have potent properties from the excretion they produce because of the sun’s powerful energy. The medicinal value of these plants is well known to the Bedouin who have been using these plants for hundreds of years, although in recent years the knowledge is getting lost as pharmacies and modern medicine is taking over even in the desert.

The number of varieties of plants found in Sinai is surprisingly high given the dryness of its desert. They are counted in their thousands with areas like St Katherine’s having over 900 endemic plants. There are many books that cover this subject in a much more proffessional way than this short article which is based entirely on my personal experience. I would like to introduce a few of the most interesting plants, mainly ones that have medicinal properties.

Baatharaan

This bush has green/blue coloured leaves that grow off thin twigs. Its strong good smell is misleading as it actually tastes extremely bitter. This bitterness is probably what gives it its effective healing effect for digestive or stomach upsets. The leaves can be boiled and drank like tea, but due to the unpleasant taste, I recommend to simply swallow a pinch with a glass of water. I have never seen baatharaan fail in its job to cure a stomach upset. The Bedouin say that if you take a lot if it regularly it would take care of even the most serious bacterias or viruses affecting the digestive system.

Other know uses appart from cleansing are to tackle certain skin disorders and breathing it in for clearing the nose (some recommend to sleep on a pillow filled with baatharaan to clear the sinuses.

Baatharaan

N’heyda

This is the desert’s version of camomille, with yellow flowers and sticky little green leaves on thin twigs. A very pleasantly strong smelling and tasting plant with medicinal properties. N’heyda is good for colds in general and as a calming drink. It is also used to clean the kidneys and is know to eliminate kindey stones. The Bedouin also add this plant to their tea, a tasty and special combination.

N’heyda

N’heyda

Eilejaan

This plant means ‘cures’ in Bedouin. It produces long stems that are boiled slightly and produce a light greenish drink. The Bedouin usually place the stems on a rock and crush them with repetitive blows with a stone in order to obtain the most out of it before using it. Eilejaan is basically good for blood circulation and therefore numerous things such as headaches- stiff neck- muscular tension- digestion- healing bruises and cuts- swelling- blood clots- poor blood circulation and anything related to cleaning or regulating blood flow.

Eilejaan

Eilejaan

Nigd

This a rarer plant and not so well known. It has an incredibly good smell (a bit like peach) but it is inedible. It dries out quite quickly and is mainly in all its splendour after rainfall. Nigd has a very particular use, it is an eye cleanser. I have used it once myself, and it is very effective. I did well to listen to advice and dilute if with a lot of water after boiling it. It basically made my eye produce tears for about 10 minutes (without any emotion ivolved). This was slightly stinging, however not aggravating.

Nigd

Ghagha

An even rarer plant, well know in some areas for its anti-venemous properties. There are many stories of Bedouin getting bitten or stung by either spiders, scorpions or snakes, and surviving thanks to ghagha. The plant is boiled and then drank as well as administered on the area of the bite/sting. It apparentely sucks the poison out of the body. Also know to accelerate the healing of cuts. In this case the plants is steamed over the affected area.

Ghagha

Siyaala

This Acacia tree is probably the emblem of Sinai, which is why we chose to have it on our logo. This a favourite food for camels that can actually chew through its tough thorns. It also produces a very light, ‘fluffy’ yellow flower that falls easily to the ground and is loved by all desert herbivourous animals. It is used to tan leather and its medicinal properties are also numerous and cover such ailments as stomach upsets and colds. It also produces shade at all times of the days making it ideal for resting under in the hot summers. Wadi Saal, Wadi al Ogda, Wadi Mitoura, Wadi Zaghra, Wadi Gnei are all full of beautiful acacia, Siyaala trees.